The Denver Post

Colorado judge maintains charges for Danish man

- By Colleen Slevin

A judge on Friday decided against dropping criminal charges lodged against a mentally ill Danish man accused of starting a large Colorado wildfire that burned 149 homes in 2018.

The decision came after a prosecutor said Jesper Joergensen would not be deported if released from jail because of Biden administra­tion changes to immigratio­n policy.

Fearing that Joergensen could pose a danger if freed, Judge Gregory Lyman instead ordered him sent to the state mental health hospital for evaluation and whether a doctor there might recommend Joergensen be forcibly medicated to treat his delusional disorder.

Lyman acknowledg­ed he was not sure if he had the authority to send Joergensen to the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo, which has struggled for years to keep up with demand for the evaluation­s of people accused of crimes.

Earlier this month, Lyman seemed to be leaning toward dismissing the case after Joergensen’s psychiatri­st in a mental health jail unit indicated he did not think that Joergensen would qualify for forced medication since he does not pose a risk to himself or others while behind bars.

If Joergensen is sent to the state hospital, a doctor there could possibly reach a different conclusion and ask the court for permission to forcibly medicate him.

Aaron Pratt of the state Attorney General’s Office told Lyman that Colorado’s Office of Behavioral Health had the right to decide where people get mental health treatment.

He also noted there were “practical concerns” in getting people admitted to the Pueblo hospital, which recently resumed taking in new patients following a pause because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

During the presidency of Donald Trump, anyone in the U.S. illegally was a priority for deportatio­n. After Joergensen was arrested for allegedly starting the Spring Creek fire in 2018, immigratio­n officials said he had overstayed his visa and asked to be notified of his release from jail so that they could take him into custody.

But on the first day of Joe Biden’s presidency, the Department of Homeland Security directed immigratio­n authoritie­s to focus on national security and public safety threats as well as anyone apprehende­d entering the U.S. illegally after Nov. 1 and put a 100-day pause on most deportatio­ns.

While representa­tives of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t did not respond to questions about how the policies would affect Joergensen, a Homeland Security memo laying out the new directives says only those convicted of aggravated felonies would be considered a public safety threat requiring deportatio­n.

According to a prosecutio­n motion filed Thursday, the U.S. ICE field director for Colorado, Kostas Patakonsta­ntinou, told Assistant District Attorney Cynthia Kowert that Joergensen would not be deported under the new policies.

Joergensen is charged with 349 counts of arson and has been held in jail for more than 2½ years.

Several experts have found that he is unable to participat­e in a trial and help his defense lawyers because of detachment from reality.

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